The caravan members participated in a farewell
dinner and cultural event at the Casa de la Amistad in Havana on
Saturday night. Attending the activity were the president of the
Cuban Friendship Institute (ICAP) Kenia Serrano, Vice President
of ICAP, Basilio Gutierrez, representatives of the Central
Committee´s Religious Affairs Department and Reverend Raul
Suarez, Director of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center, among
others.
The 85 member caravan collected 100 tons of
humanitarian aid after touring over 100 US cities and challenged
Washington´s travel ban by not requesting a license from the
Treasury Department. The caravanistas said they have the
constitutional right to travel to Cuba and reiterated their
condemnation of the US economic blockade against the Cuban
people.
Among some of the most important activities during their stay on
the island were the encounter with the leader of the Revolution
Fidel Castro and their participation in the main activity for
the 57th anniversary of the attack against the Carlos Manuel de
Cespedes and Moncada Garrisons.
Reverend Lucius Walker, Executive Director of the Interreligious
Foundation for Community Organization (IFCO) said that the
caravanistas will return to the US with the commitment to work
harder in pressuring the US government in lifting the unjust
economic blockade against Cuba. He stressed that they will look
for more creative ways in working in favor of the release of the
Cuban Five.
Walker also said that they will work in campaigns
to pressure US President Barack Obama into releasing the five
anti terrorist fighters.
Reverend Tom Smith said that they will also
continue to work in breaking the media silence regarding Cuba
and get the people in the US to learn about the real Cuba.
He said that more and more young people are
joining their caravan each year.
Smith recalled that about 80 percent of this
year´s caravanistas are people that have come to Cuba for the
first time.
“That is very important, it is an example that
people are hungry for information on Cuba and the fact that they
came with Pastors for Peace is even more important because they
came not as mere tourists but as solidarity activists that will
continue their work in favor of the island when they return
home.” he said.
Pastors for Peace is a project of the Interreligious Foundation
for Community Organization (IFCO), a national ecumenical center
working in favor of social justice since 1967.